info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Chemical and isotopic features of Li-rich brines from the Salar de Olaroz, Central Andes of NW Argentina
Fecha
2020-11Registro en:
Franco, María Gabriela; Peralta Arnold, Yésica Jael; Santamans, Carla Daniela; López Steinmetz, Romina Lucrecia; Tassi, Franco; et al.; Chemical and isotopic features of Li-rich brines from the Salar de Olaroz, Central Andes of NW Argentina; Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd; Journal of South American Earth Sciences; 103; 102742; 11-2020; 1-10
0895-9811
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Franco, María Gabriela
Peralta Arnold, Yésica Jael
Santamans, Carla Daniela
López Steinmetz, Romina Lucrecia
Tassi, Franco
Venturi, Stefania
Jofré, Cynthia Betina
Caffe, Pablo Jorge
Córdoba, Juan E.
Resumen
The lithium-rich brines of the Salar de Olaroz in the Central Andes of NW Argentina are considered to be of great economic and strategic interest. This study focused on the fluid source(s) and geochemical processes governing the chemical and isotopic characteristics of the surficial waters of Olaroz (residual brines, ephemeral lakes, rivers and tributary streams), aiming to define the mechanisms leading to such a huge Li reservoir. The chemistry of the Rosario River, which is one of the main sources of recharge of the Salar de Olaroz, is mostly controlled by fluid inputs from hydrothermal systems located north of the salar (in the volcanic areas of Rosario de Coyaguayma, Pairique, and Cono Panizo). The hydrothermal fluids are characterized by relatively high Li concentrations, as they interact with Li-rich rocks pertaining to Miocene – Pliocene volcanic formations, Ordovician sedimentary deposits, and, possibly, pre-Ordovician crystalline basement. In the salar, the hyperarid climate regulates the relative proportion between supplied waters and evaporation, inducing deposition/dissolution of salts, which controls the concentrations of main ions in brines and ephemeral lakes. Hence, the peculiar combination of a Li-rich primary source, the hydrothermal scavenging by geothermal fluids that feed the Rosario River, and secondary concentration processes affecting the surficial water within the salar leads to the formation of the huge Li reservoir characterizing this area.